PPF throws hat in the ring to manage DB pension assets for growth

The United Kingdom’s £32 billion Pension Protection Fund (PPF) is marketing its credentials to act as consolidator for the country’s thousands of  DB corporate retirement funds.

The government wants the £1.5 trillion sector to invest more in economic growth at home and put money into alternative assets like infrastructure and private equity rather than invest in these schemes’ favourite asset – liability-matching fixed income that safely secures member outcomes.

The PPF’s push for an expanded role to act as a consolidator comes in response to the government’s call for evidence on how DB pension schemes, and the PPF, could support greater productive investment in the UK. Growing pressure to cajole these risk-averse pension funds to invest more in illiquid assets is an increasingly fraught debate. Many closed DB pension funds are well funded and don’t need to take this added risk to deliver on returns.

The PPF is the latest large pension scheme to burnish its ability to manage these DB funds. Under its new name Brightwell, BT Pension Scheme Management, the executive arm of the £47 billion ($59.8 billion) BT Pension Scheme (BTPS) is already offering its pension management capabilities to other defined benefit pension schemes – like the £1 billion DB arm of the EE Pension Scheme.

Perhaps Brightwell’s most compelling service comes in its promise of a coherent, single approach to pension management. Under the Brightwell umbrella schemes can replace a noisy cohort of actuarial, investment, fiduciary and covenant advisors, plus multiple asset managers, with a single operation.

A step change

The PPF explains that persuading DB funds to invest in riskier long-term assets, and accepting more volatility, is at odds with many of these funds de-risking strategies and will require a step change.

Sponsored Content

These schemes typically seek insurer buy-outs, it continues in its response to the government. They buy gilts and corporate bonds to reduce balance sheet volatility to get to this endgame as soon as possible.

Most pension funds are sufficiently well funded and do not need to generate the higher returns offered by an equity stake in productive finance assets. Improved scheme funding in recent years, driven by higher interest rates, will further accelerate the trend for closed, corporate, DB schemes to de-risk, it states. Arguments echoed by others on these pages like Railpen’s head of investment strategy and research, John Greaves.

The PPF says it has the experience and expertise to run a consolidated fund. This would create scale, and combined with professional asset management, lead to greater allocations in productive finance while providing security for members.

“The PPF is well placed to run such a Fund,” says Oliver Morley, PPF chief executive. “Consolidation must be an integral part of the solution.”

The PPF outlines how a Public Sector Consolidator solution could be designed, structured and set up. It argues that its own investment approach and asset allocation acts as a blueprint for what could be achieved.

Around 30 per cent of the portfolio is invested in alternative assets comprising private equity, private credit, infrastructure and timberland/agriculture, over two thirds of which are in the UK.  The PPF has 18-year experience consolidating over 1,000 DB schemes, it says.

“Running a Public Sector Consolidator would be a natural evolution of the PPF’s existing capabilities. Through our investment approach the PPF already provides a blueprint for how the government’s objectives can be delivered at scale. We’re a major buyer of UK gilts, invest heavily in productive assets and, by investing for growth over the long term, we’ve delivered greater security for our members,”  adds Morley.

Alongside consolidation, and an overhaul in the structure of the DB market, other step changes would also be essential. Schemes will have to embrace long term investments, diversification, interest rate/inflation risk management, scale and professional management.

The PPF also argues that unleashing this money for investment would involve “severing the link” between the sponsoring employer and its pension plan, which currently encourages most schemes to minimise risk.

Leave a Comment

The twin forces rewriting the rules of investing

The twin forces rewriting the rules of investing

Portfolios built for the old world will be severely tested as emerging forces rewrite the rules of investing. The Fiduciary Investors Symposium heard that geopolitical and macroeconomic upheaval, together with the disruption wrought by AI, should force asset owners to rethink the structure and composition of portfolios.

Sort content by

Australian allocators revisit China as AI race heats up

Top Australian allocators have conceded it is time to rethink the underweight positions to China which have characterised their portfolios, as the Asian superpower’s intensifying AI race with the US creates attractive opportunities.

La Caisse’s oil exit pays off as renewables portfolio pulls ahead of fossil fuels

Divesting from the oil sector has been a boon for La Caisse’s performance, as the Canadian pension giant says its energy investments have earned billions in value-add compared to the benchmark since the inception of its climate strategy. Head of sustainability Bertrand Millot unpacks the fund’s approach in an interview with Top1000funds.com.

Falling dollar dents Canadian pension returns; triggers hedging rethink

A weakening US dollar has eaten into the returns of Canada’s largest pension funds as annual reports revealed the currency shock forced a fundamental rethink from some investors around hedging practices. OMERS has pivoted from a policy hedging target to a more flexible approach fulfilling multiple objectives, while OTPP more than halved its US dollar exposure in 2025.

OPTrust: hiking rates because of the oil shock is a mistake

To navigate rates and inflation uncertainty, OPTrust is leaning into dynamic portfolio construction, actively managed options, and a total portfolio approach supporting the belief that inflation resilience is built into how portfolios are constructed not an individual asset or exposure.

What I took away from the world’s ‘festival of private capital’

The on- and off-stage antics at the extravagant Milken Global Conference in Los Angeles tell us a lot about where institutional capital is right on the money – and where it is putting its head in the sand.

NBIM lays out case for real estate turnaround

Norge Bank Investment Management chief executive Nicolai Tangen conceded the $2.1 trillion fund is “not satisfied” with the performance of its real estate portfolio, as weakness in the asset class was a main contributor to three consecutive years of negative relative returns. All eyes are now on whether its overhauled strategy, which includes new structures and sector composition, can turn things around.

Previous